The Mi'kmaq people traditionally viewed land ownership as a communal and collective responsibility rather than individual possession. They believed that land was a shared resource meant for the sustenance and well-being of the community, and they practiced a sustainable relationship with the environment. This perspective emphasized stewardship and respect for nature, contrasting sharply with European notions of private property and land ownership. Their understanding of land was deeply tied to cultural and spiritual beliefs, reflecting their connection to the territory.
No one owned the land
land ownership
Lenin's view toward property ownership was that it had to be abolished if capitalism were to be eliminated and socialism (and later communism) successfully imposed on the society. As Karl Marx had said the essence of capitalism is the private ownership of property. Abolish private ownership of property and you abolish capitalism. One of the very first things Lenin did after the Revolution was to abolish the private ownership of property and vest it in the state.
If you own land, you work for yourself and you can lease the land to tenants. If you don't own the land, you work for the people who do own the land. Land ownership is important to everyone who wants to be their own boss.
By birthright.
dutch
the mikmaq aka (L'nu) taught history throught stories and legends. Example: The mikmaq land was destroyed, the forests burnt the river dryed, no animals left but a few, so Bear came and taught the mikmaq to respect the land and use everybit of its catch, and not to waste. This might have been the telling of the asteroid that hit north America 13,000 years ago.
Land ownership was taken over mainly by the businesses.
There is no private land ownership under communism.
Europeans saw the lands in the Americas as free for the taking. The Native Americans had a totally different view of land ownership than Europeans, which worked to their serious disadvantage.
Europeans saw the lands in the Americas as free for the taking. The Native Americans had a totally different view of land ownership than Europeans, which worked to their serious disadvantage.
they now call it mikmakik, but the word mikmaq is influenced by the french, so it could have been L'nukik since the mikmaq called themselves lnu
Land ownership
No one owned the land
When all the land on Earth is collectively owned by the public or the government, it is known as common ownership or public ownership of land. This system contrasts with private ownership, where individuals or entities own land for their exclusive use.
The Lenape believed in communal land ownership, where land was shared by the entire community rather than owned by individuals. They viewed the land as a gift from the Earth and believed in stewardship rather than exclusive ownership.
Generally, every jurisdiction that allows the private ownership of land maintains a system for recording or registering land ownership. You can usually find your land records office by doing an online search using your county, state and "land records".